killick nThe term "killick" is employed correctly for a boat-anchor, usually a home-made one, and often one constructed of wood and stone; and is only by a jocular extension applied to ships' anchors, especially as in the nickname "cross-killicks," given to an arm-badge composed of two heraldic anchors in saltire, worn in the Royal Navy, and in such phrases as "up killick," -> to weigh anchor, and "down killick," to moor. The origin of the word has been given up as a philological puzzle by the [i] New English Dictionary [i], which traces it back to 1630 as ...